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From: The Bloomberg Close <noreplygmad.bloombergbusiness.com>
To:
Subject: Cut and done?
Date: Wed, 30 Oct 2019 21:33:12 +0000
Bloomberg
Good afternoon. Here's what you need to know to end your day.
• The Fed came through with a cut, but that might be it for a while.
• Facebook and Apple exceeded earnings expectations.
• A jug of wine, a loaf of bread—and manga.
The Fed slashed interest rates for the third time this year, but signaled
policy may stay on hold for the time being. The FOMC dropped its pledge
to "act as appropriate to sustain the expansion," while adding a promise to
monitor data as officials assess their next move. Two members voted
against the 25 basis point cut, preferring no change. Traders trimmed bets
of more easing this year.
• "Monetary policy is in a good place," Fed Chairman Jerome Powell
told a news conference following the decision. "We see the current
stance of policy as likely to remain appropriate as long as incoming
information about the economy remains broadly consistent with our
outlook."
• Meanwhile, the Treasury expressed continued interest in issuing a
50-year bond, for the first time, as part of efforts to expand its
investor base as the budget deficit widens to $1 trillion. The
department said it's also weighing a 20-year bond and an inaugural
floating-rate note with a one-year maturity linked to SOFR.
• America's GDP increased at a 1.9% annualized rate in the third
quarter, topping expectations for 1.6% growth as
helped the economy expand. Still, that's down from 2% in the second
quarter and is the lowest since the end of 2018.
resilient consumers
VJ
Facebook's sales rose a better-than-projected 29%, weathering a period
rife with regulatory challenges and criticism by boosting ad revenue and
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adding about 35 million new users. It also said Susan Desmond-Hellmann,
its lead independent director, is stepping down from the board. Earlier, the
company agreed to pay 500,000 pounds ($644,000) to end a U.K. privacy
probe in the wake of the Cambridge Analytica scandal.
• Apple's projection for holiday revenue beat estimates, signaling
solid demand for the latest iPhones, new services like Apple TV+ and
wearables. "We're very optimistic about what the holiday quarter has
in store," CEO Tim Cook said. Fourth-quarter earnings and sales
also topped expectations.
• Starbucks jumped in late trading after posting
in China and the U.S. The coffee chain forecast comparable sales
will be up between 3% and 4% globally and announced it would
boost its dividend.
strong sales gains
• But pizza and beer may be losing their charm. Yum! Brands slid
on third-quarter sales that trailed estimates as the company's Pizza
Hut chain struggled. And Molson Coors posted disappointing
numbers and disclosed plans to cut as many as 500 jobs and close
an office in Denver, where it moved in just a few years ago.
• General Electric rose nearly 12% after boosting its 2019 cash-flow
forecast for the second straight quarter. The industrial businesses will
generate as much as $2 billion in free cash this year, GE said after
previously forecasting no more than $1 billion. Third-quarter adjusted
earnings of 15 cents a share also beat expectations.
What Else is Happening
Twitter will ban political advertising from its platform, effective Nov. 22,
CEO Jack Dorsey said in a tweet. The company plans to publish a new
political ads policy outlining the change in a few weeks. The move comes
as rival Facebook faces pressure from its employees to stop letting
politicians lie in ads.
Kamala Harris is hemorrhaging cash. As the 2020 presidential
candidate drops in the polls, she plans to cut staff in her Baltimore
headquarters and slash pay for advisers in an effort to keep her campaign
afloat. Campaign manager Juan Rodriguez outlined the restructuring in a
memo, citing an "incredibly competitive resources environment" and a
need to reduce spending to maximize prospects in Iowa.
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Chile canceled next month's APEC summit in Santiago where Donald
Trump and Xi Jinping were expected to sign a preliminary trade deal.
President Sebastian Pinera also called off the COP25 climate change
conference set for December, highlighting his government's trouble after
almost two weeks of deadly protests. The announcement seemed to catch
the White House off guard, though a spokesman said Trump still plans to
sign a partial trade deal with Xi at about the same time in November.
At least 10 large wildfires are burning across California, including one
that erupted Wednesday morning in Ventura County that's threatening the
Ronald Reagan Presidential Library. About 365,000 PG&E customers
remained without electricity from the company's last two blackouts through
the late morning. The state now faces "a heightened credit challenge" as
the frequency of wildfires increases and the traditional fire season
lengthens, according to Moody's. The good news is that winds are
expected to ebb this weekend.
Smoke rises behind the Marine One on display at the Ronald Reagan
Presidential Library. Photographer Patrick T. Fallon/Bloomberg
Opinion
The Fed needs to do more than just head off a recession, Karl Smith
writes for Bloomberg Opinion. Part of its mandate is to ensure that as
many Americans as possible have jobs. There's little sign of full
employment, and market-based measures of inflation expectations are
falling. It should continue cutting rates to ensure inflation rises above 2%,
for two or three quarters.
and stays there
The NCAA probably hopes to draw the line at allowing college athletes to
earn money on their name, image and likeness, Bloomberg Opinion's Joe
Nocera writes. But it's more likely that this marks the beginning, not the
end, of payments for players. Once some athletes begin to reap
endorsement money, players without endorsement deals are going to want
some form of compensation.
Businessweek Today
Three decades ago, drones were available to only the most
technologically developed state military organizations. Today they're
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everywhere, being used by weaker states, small military forces and many
non-state actors. Because armies no longer have the monopoly, others
can now impose their will on the global stage, said Raphael Marcus from
the department of war studies at King's College London. And it's already
leading to greater instability, as demonstrated by the attack on the Saudi
Abqaiq oil processing facility.
Life on Africa's Zambezi River is hard. The climate crisis is making it
deadly. Take Victoria Falls, known locally as Mosi oa Tunya—or "The
Smoke That Thunders." The world's biggest sheet of falling water is 1.2
miles wide and drops 328 feet into a chasm. At the peak of its flow, it
churns up a mist that can be seen 30 miles away. But this year, with the
water at its lowest level in more than two decades, there's
no thunder. That's just one effect on impoverished African coastal or
riverine communities.
little smoke and
What Everybody's Talking About
Trump plans to take a break from the impeachment fight in Washington
to watch another brawl in New York City. The president is tentatively set to
attend a mixed martial arts bout on Saturday night at Madison Square
Garden, according to people familiar. The event, which comes just days
after Trump was booed while attending the World Series, will be headlined
by a contest between welterweights Jorge Masvidal and Nate Diaz.
Jeffrey Epstein's autopsy is more consistent with strangulation than
suicide, a forensic pathologist hired by the disgraced financier's brother
told Fox & Friends. "The evidence points toward homicide rather than
suicide," said Dr. Michael Baden, a former New York City medical
examiner. He pointed to fractures in the hyoid bone that are "very unusual
for suicide." The findings were disputed by the city's chief medical
examiner, who reiterated that Epstein hanged himself.
By the Way
Pop the corks: The Drops of God manga series has finally been
translated into English The tale of two half-brothers who compete to
inherit their father's vast wine collection by identifying 13 rare wines from
his notes has already sold hundreds of millions of copies in Japan, South
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Korea, and Taiwan. Amazon's ComiXology Originals and partner
Kodansha have just released the first 11 of 44 volumes. The rest will arrive
next year along with an online wine club.
FOJ,LOVWS
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Source: Drops of ciod Wine
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| Filename | EFTA00083661.pdf |
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| Indexed | 2026-02-11T10:30:04.289264 |